Forced Vaccination Price George's County
Forced Vaccination and Medication is Gathering Steam.
Today, November 17, 2007, in Prince Geoge's County, Maryland, it was 2300 kids (whose parents apparently did not use the same exemption as Mr. Ivey did for his own kids!) Your arm and mine may be the next to get jabbed with who knows what for who knows what purpose.
Neither Circuit Judge William D. Missouri, the county’s administrative judge, and Circuit Judge C. Philip Nichols Jr., who handles juvenile matters nor Mr. Ivey made mention of any liability which the State of Maryland or Prince George's County would assume if children vaccinated under threat of parental jail time and fines experienced adverse events following vaccination. These adverse events can range from neurological damage including autism to death. In fact, vaccine injury is so well established that the Federal Government has a vaccine injury funding procedure to compensate parents for "vaccine injuries" as adverse events are called.
According to a New York Times article today, November 18, 2007, kids and their parents were herded through an innoculation line and, incredibly, parents were reported to be both relieved and comfortable with the procedure. Maryland State's Attorney Glen F. Ivey would presumably not have been very happy if his kids were among the kids being herded since he admitted in a radio interview last Tuesday that he understands enough about the dangers of vaccination to refuse imunization (including Hepatitis B vaccine) for his own kids. Nonetheless, he eagerly compeled 2300 kids who are not his own to be vaccinated over their parent's objections. And he was willing to do that at gunpoint.
Quoted in the Washington Post on November 14, 2007, Mr. Ivey was reported as telling parents, "
"We can do this the easy way or the hard way, but it's got to get done," Prince George's State's Attorney Glenn F. Ivey (D) said at a news conference in Upper Marlboro. "I'm willing to move forward with legal action." And so he did.
As reported in the Washington Post and the New York Times, Maryland States's Attorney Glen F. Ivey was so determined to "protect" the children of Prince George's County that he sent letters advising more than1600 parents that if they did not vaccinate their 2300 school aged children (who were already being denied admission and education by the school because of their dangerous unvaccinated state), the parents would be fined and jailed.
At no time did Mr. Ivey, Judge C. Phillip Nichols, Jr., who is in charge of juvenile issues or Circuit Judge William D. Missouri, the county's administative judge, note why the same vaccine that Mr. Ivey's children were protected from should be forcibly administered to 2300 other children. The possibility that Mr. Ivy's children do not attend school in Prince George's County as not been verified. Since the FDA recently lifted the burden of liability from manufacturers whose FDA approved vaccines or drugs harm people no matter how they are used the liklihood that the County as taken seriously what its own liability might be is slim.
If Mr. Ivey's children do attend school in Prince George's Country where their father has intimidated the parents of 2300 children into acquiescing to allow them to be injected with potentially harmful or lethal substances (17,000 reports of adverse reactions to Hepatitis B vaccine occur in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, VAERS, In the from 18 months from January 1996 to May 1997 data alone) the waiver he was apparently better informed about the existence of a waiver than the parents in today's herd innoculation, few of whom appeared to know about a waiver possibility.